This is the research blog of Anders Jensen-Waud. Here I publish my research and thoughts on enterprise architecture, process management, and management in general. My views are purely personal and do not necessarily reflect the views of my employer.

Thursday, 15 September 2011

My research paper on systems thinking, sense-making, and enterprise architecture planning in government has been published in the Journal of Enterprise Architecture, a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal published by the Association of Open Group Enterprise Architects (AOGEA). The paper includes a case study of architecture-enabled transformation of a government agency merger in NSW, which includes geospatial location awareness, service oriented architecture, and enterprise integration. The paper is titled: Processes of Sense-Making and Systems Thinking in Government Enterprise Architecture Planning.

My abstract is as follows:

This purpose of this article is to investigate the systemic properties of Enterprise Architecture Planning (EAP) in the Australian government sector. Based on a case study of the Land and Property Management Authority of New South Wales, the article examines and outlines the crucial necessity for including systems thinking, systems learning, and organizational sense-making in Enterprise Architecture (EA) theory and planning. The main argument is based on qualitative research into the limitations of capturing and modeling organizations using EA methodologies and modeling approaches.The EA discipline, including its tools and methodologies, relies on the metaphor of engineering the enterprise and building stable taxonomies of knowledge and process. The practical reality that e-government programs are facing is technical, sociological, and messy. However, EA tends to operate within an engineering metaphor that assumes stability, predictability, and control. Here, the author highlights the necessity of an alternative, less positivist approach to EA planning in order to understand and articulate the tacit knowledge dimensions and messy, wicked problems of organizational life.Soft systems thinking, socio-technical theory, and sense-making are introduced as theoretical and practical frames to overcome these limitations and produce a better, more viable and realistic model of planning in government enterprises. These concepts are finally amalgamated into a general, integrative model of EA planning.